Turn your smartphone or tablet (e.g., Iphone, Ipad, Samsung, Motorola, etc) camera into a WebCam to make video conference (e.g., Google Meeting, Zoom, Discord, etc) in Linux.
Examples:
| <!doctype html> | |
| <html> | |
| <head> | |
| <!-- Run in full-screen mode. --> | |
| <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-capable" content="yes"> | |
| <!-- Make the status bar black with white text. --> | |
| <meta name="apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-style" content="black"> |
Turn your smartphone or tablet (e.g., Iphone, Ipad, Samsung, Motorola, etc) camera into a WebCam to make video conference (e.g., Google Meeting, Zoom, Discord, etc) in Linux.
Examples:
Plant Intelligence and the Imaginal Realm (Alex)
Why we make things and why it matters (Sherman)
The Wisdom of Insecurity
The most Human Human
Built to Sell
After long searching I did not find a good description of how to set up Syncthing that works exclusively via CLI without using a Web browser on the devices.
This is useful for example on a headless Raspberry Pi without proxying web-traffic through SSH or with port-forwarding limitations. In this example we will want to share the default folder from Machine A with Machine B
| Machine A | Machine B |
|---|
The AWS Auto Scaling Goup, configured with a customised Cloud-Init file, sends a notification to an SNS Topic, which in turn passes it onto an SQS queue that the Salt Master is subscribed to. A Reactor watches for the auto scaling events and pre-approves the new minion based on its Auto Scaling group name and instance ID.
Note
This does not works in browser for quests which require you to play a game! Use the desktop app to complete those.
How to use this script:
Console tab| class color: | |
| PURPLE = '\033[95m' | |
| CYAN = '\033[96m' | |
| DARKCYAN = '\033[36m' | |
| BLUE = '\033[94m' | |
| GREEN = '\033[92m' | |
| YELLOW = '\033[93m' | |
| RED = '\033[91m' | |
| BOLD = '\033[1m' | |
| UNDERLINE = '\033[4m' |
If you sometimes find yourself needing to share a file over HTTP, there are not many file-sharing solutions you can use.
This action works by publishing files via GitHub Pages behind an obscure prefix path. It updates the repository README with the URLs, so that you have links to the published files.
You can keep the repository secret, and the files are public but semi-secret, so you can share them without concern that other files will be discovered.
| #include<stdio.h> | |
| // gcc print_argv.c -o print_argv | |
| int main(int argc, char *argv[]) | |
| { | |
| int i; | |
| for(i = 1;i < argc;i++) | |
| { | |
| printf("[%d] %s\n", i, argv[i]); |